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Country archive

D

Denmark

Country view in the panda archive

Country 1 location 2 pandas

Denmark appears in the archive through long-term conservation partnerships, local institutions, and the pandas connected to them.

How to use this page

Move from the country view into institutions, pandas, and the surrounding archive

Country pages work best as a mid-level hub: start with the institutions recorded here, then move into panda profiles, recent archive activity, and the reading connected to this geography.

Institution map

Places in Denmark

1 location recorded

Copenhagen Zoo

Zoo
0 active
Denmark · Frederiksberg
55.6720, 12.5222
View location

Panda profiles

Pandas connected to Denmark

2 pandas recorded

Currently in Denmark

The active panda profiles tied to institutions in this country.

2 active

Mao Sun

毛笋

Alive
11 years old
Copenhagen Zoo

Mao Sun (毛笋), studbook #919, is a female giant panda born on July 26, 2014 at the Chengdu Research Base. Her parents are...

captive-bred twin chengdu-base +4
View profile

Xing Er

星二

Alive
12 years old
Copenhagen Zoo

Xing Er (星二), studbook #900, is a male giant panda born on August 23, 2013 at the Chengdu Research Base. His parents are...

captive-bred twin chengdu-base +4
View profile

Recent activity

What the archive has recorded here

View all updates →
2020
Jun 8

Xing Er Escapes Panda House

Xing Er briefly escaped from his enclosure.

Read update
2019
Apr 10

Mao Sun Queen Inauguration

Danish Queen inaugurated Mao Sun's panda house.

Read update
2019
Apr 4

Mao Sun Arrives in Denmark

Mao Sun arrived at Copenhagen Zoo.

Read update
2019
Apr 4

Xing Er Arrives in Denmark

Xing Er arrived at Copenhagen Zoo.

Read update
2015
Jul 26

Mao Sun transferred to copenhagen_zoo

Mao Sun moved to copenhagen_zoo.

Read update

Activity in this country has been recorded in the archive since 2015.

Continue through the archive

Follow the country view into places, pandas, and the broader library

Use this country page as a midpoint. From here, the most useful next step is usually a specific institution, a panda profile, or an article that explains the wider conservation context.